"I would like to warn American leaders against miscalculations
that could have fatal consequences. For unknown reasons, they
underestimate the seriousness of the rebuff they may receive,"
state news agency RIA quoted Ryabkov as saying.
He referred to comments last week by President Vladimir Putin,
who said NATO countries were playing with fire and risking a
deeper global conflict - one of a series of warnings from Moscow
about the risk of a serious escalation.
"I urge these figures (in the U.S.) ... to spend some of their
time, which they apparently spend on some kind of video games,
judging by the lightness of their approach, on studying what was
said in detail by Putin," Ryabkov said.
Putin had delivered "a very significant warning and it must be
taken with the utmost seriousness”, he added.
Putin said the West would be directly involved in any use of its
weapons by Ukraine to strike deep inside Russia, because such
attacks would require its satellite, intelligence and military
help.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said last week that NATO
had the right to help Ukraine uphold its own right to
self-defense, and this did not make NATO a party to the
conflict.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said at the weekend that
Kyiv was grateful to Washington for allowing it to use
U.S.-supplied HIMARS rocket systems in the Kharkiv region, but
this was not enough. Ukraine has long argued that restrictions
on the way it can use Western-supplied weapons are seriously
limiting its ability to defend itself.
Russian news agencies quoted Ryabkov as saying that attempts by
Kyiv to attack Russian early-warning radar systems would be
thwarted and Moscow may respond asymmetrically to such steps.
A Kyiv intelligence source said last week that a Ukrainian drone
had targeted a long-range radar deep inside Russia that is part
of Russia's early-warning system to detect whether it is under
nuclear attack.
(Reporting by Reuters, writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by
Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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